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Title: The Pacifist, and other poems

Author: Howard Futhey Brinton

Release date: December 6, 2021 [eBook #66892]

Language: English

Credits: Carol Brown, Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PACIFIST, AND OTHER POEMS ***

THE PACIFIST

And Other Poems

HOWARD FUTHEY BRINTON

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BOSTON
THE GORHAM PRESS MCMXVIII

Copyright, 1918, by Howard F. Brinton


All Rights Reserved

MADE IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


The Gorham Press, Boston, U. S. A.

TO

THOMAS WILSON PIERCE, M. A.,

AND

WILLIAM MacFUNN BAIRD

CONTENTS
PAGE
The Pacifist 9
“Adam’s Apple” 11
Mac’s (Psychologic) Cigar 12
Breaking In 15
La Reve 16
Sol 17
The Poor Man’s Club 18
Retrospect 20
On “Gungha Din” 21
Why? 22
Barney 23
Come, Little Girl 24
I’ll Come, Little Boy 25
Chenoweth 26
You Wonder 28
In “Del’s” 29
The Mother 30
Jumbo’s Dream 31
The Blues 33
The “I Told You So Club” 34
E Pluribus 37
The Man About Town 39
Elk Creek 40
How the Village Canard Started 41
The Spring Violet 44
Sandy Flash 45
The New Suit 46
The Libertine 47
The Liberty Cornet Band 48
The Periodic 50
Mrs. Murphy’s Purchase 51
The Legend of Deborah’s Rock 52
The Actor-Man 54
The Gangster 55
Tom 58
La Langue Anglaise 59
Ne’er More 60
When “Ty” Cobb Comes to Town 61

THE PACIFIST

THE PACIFIST
In Ben’s blood there coursed the fire of the Celt,
A strain of the strong Saxon thew;
From his eyes shot a glint of a son of the South—
An American type through and through.
A dreamer, daredevil, and care free, they say,
Who lived in the far remote past,—
An unpractical man and careless forsooth;
Inclined as a youth to be fast.
He’d shot up the town and sowed some wild oats,
And once on a time rolled the dice,
But heart like an ox and muscled like steel;
A dreamer? Yes, without price.
He filled no great niche in the town where he lived,
Was never considered worth while.
The pacifist craft rolled their eyes to the sky
And mentioned his name with a smile,
An odious smile, twixt a smirk and a grin,
A smile that was snaky and sly.
They’d ne’er draw a sword nor strike with a club,
But could damn with the lift of an eye.
The tocsin of war sounds at last in the land,
And threatened invasion seemed near.
The hand of the patriot went to the sword;
The pacifist muttered in fear;
He muttered, then sold to the Government, ground
Down hard by the burden of Thor,
Life’s veriest needs at prohibitive rates;
Conscription did curse and abhor.
Ben rode to the front with the coming of strife
Where the roar of the guns rose and fell;
Was killed while he strove for democracy’s cause
As he fought like a demon of hell.
They builded a shaft in the town of his birth
To the rascally skin and the beat
Who’d tricked Uncle Sam by short-changing of food,
A lynx-eyed and oily old cheat
Who yapped about honesty, horrors of war,
Contributed largely of speech
And words of advice to the youth thereabouts—
His pacifist face was a ‘screech’,
Ben hadn’t a shaft where his forefathers slept
Nor niche in the Chancel of Fame;
No tablet recited the list of his deeds,
Nor blazoned the worth of his name.
He died as men do who answer the call
With boots on and pierced to the heart;
He died and those lived who, sneering at him,
Sucked the people’s blood dry in the mart;
Conniving at profit, a pacifist brood,
Not unwilling a country to sell;
Iniquitous, plotting and pandering to pelf—
The opal-eyed vampires of hell!
“ADAM’S APPLE”
Said Eve to “hub” Adam:
“My dear, what’s the matter?
Your eyes are all bulging;
Your teeth all a chatter.
That lump in your throat, dear,
Speak, Adam!” she muttered.
“Ad” gasped for his breath,
And spluttered and spluttered,
Then breathed more at ease;
Congestion releasing
Its hold, he looked normal,
But frowns his face creasing,
He paused before speaking:
“Eve, list while I chatter;
I’ve most choked to death, see?
The cause of the matter
Was eating your apple,
Esophagus cloying,
That Forbidden Fruit
My life most destroying.”
*  *  *
Now if we’re believing
In stuff that’s prenatal,
We plain see the reason
Some “Ad’s” sons have fatal
Big lumps all a bulging,
Their cervicals craning,—
’Twas “Grandfather’s” fault,
Heredity’s (s) training,
That lump in their throats just
Keeps sticking and sticking.
“Adam’s Apple” Eve called it,
But Eve did the picking.
MAC’S (PSYCHOLOGIC) CIGAR
There’s a quaint and care-free tavern
In the heart of business life,
In the Quaker City’s centre,—
Where relaxation’s rife.
’Tis a melting pot and leveler
For the man who has a ‘bump’,
Or the one with trouble burdened
Like a dromedary’s hump.
One finds parry and riposte rare
Unto the nth degree,
And Barney Bright, the Irish wight,
Who orders “darks” for me.
Here Andrew Jackson Johnson,
Or MacDee, with savoir faire,
Smooths down the foolish talker
Who wildly pounds the air.
Now diplomatic “Jack” and “Mac”—
MacDee, I mean—the two
Have often smoothed the ruffled path
For you and me and you.
Here rotund, pleasant Pickerel
Disports in ornate phrase,
And Henry Schaffer ‘Gungha Dins:’
Descants Bohemia’s ways
Or “Colonel Massa” Hallowell,
Of famed blue-grass renown,
Exploits the perfect luxury
Of bourbon trickling down.
And so, ad infinitum,
From out the clouds of smoke,
Away from tribulation,
We laugh and jest and joke.
Now far as I have wandered,
At home, abroad, afar,
I’ve never seen the equal
Of Bill MacDee’s cigar.
Its shape just at the lighting
Is like Zeppelin’s air craft;
’Tis round and rolled so nicely
And pointed fore and aft;
It faithfully interprets,
In rising rings of smoke,
Each psychologic moment,
Each point and pass and poke.
Now when it’s smooth and rounded
Mac’s camping on the trail
Of something that’s been mooted,
And works his mental flail.
This cautious Scottish Quaker’s
“I see” means “I’ve a hunch”;
He’s sparring for an opening
Before he hands a punch,
But just before he counters
While listening to us “spar,”
You will never see the equal
Of good, old Mac’s cigar.
It’s whirled round like a cyclone;
It’s feathered like an owl;
It’s mussed up like a scrap can
Or poor-plucked barnyard fowl.
It’s frayed and furred and serrate;
It’s toothed and torn and spurred;
It’s ripped and ribbed and ragged,
And this is what’s occurred;
Chaotic conversation
A figure needs, you know,
A metaphor or something
Interpreting its flow;
To visualize its looseness,
Its academic “punk”
From Literary Digests;
Its casuistic “bunk.”
And so when I’m relaxing,
And talking wild and far,
I catch my real reflection
In Bill MacDee’s cigar.
I trust that it may “fumer,”
Frayed, frazzled old cheroot,
For many years of joy for Mac,
With other things to boot.
And when I’ve run my gamut
And am “crossing of the bar,”
I hope to see a-glowing
The end of Mac’s cigar.
BREAKING IN
I called on the editor,
A story in my grip.
I laid it down before him,
Then bethought me of some quip,
Some turn of conversation,
Some “jolly” or some speech,
A sesame or something
By which I’d surely reach
And pink him in the vitals
Of sympathy and such
Emotionals and interest,
And volunteered this much:
“I feel I have a FUTURE
In writing, don’t you see,
In enlightening the public
With prose and poetry!”
I waited a few minutes
Until the tale he’d read,
He looked at me acutely
With horoscopic dread.
“You feel you have a FUTURE
In writing, then,” he sneered.
“You’d better get a PAST, sir,”
Was all he volunteered.

(Suggested by an after-dinner story of the late
David Graham Phillips.)
LA REVE
The girl of my dreams, ah! the girl of my dreams,
Those wonderful, beautiful, wonderful dreams,
Her delicate touch to soothe me the while,
Her exquisite brows, her sweet soulful smile.
*  *  *
I stir! I’m awake. Ah, how sweet she now seems;
It is she. I am with her, sweet girl of my dreams.
SOL
“Solomon, young, full of pep”—
I’m quoting one Burney C.
“With all the gay blades kept step
Gay Lothario he.
Solomon withered and old,
Filled to the brim with ennui,
Tired of the gay life and bold,
Ergo Proverbs. Some Solomon he!”
THE POOR MAN’S CLUB
The Poor Man’s Club is a wonderful place,
Neither fashionable, swift nor slow,
A kindly, rare, psychological spot,
As those who frequent it well know.
It’s built on the marvelous “Dutch treat” plan
Which is sane and destructive to fear.
You stand for yourself, also pay for yourself,
And expand in democracy’s cheer.
Now this old club, in fact, is just an excuse
For a rare metaphysical “bee.”
“Missourians” they, with a look which conveys:
“My friend, you will have to show me.”
No cynical scoff nor ironical thrust,
No skeptical look nor a sneer,
Just a leveling kind, “don’t throw a bluff” glance,
Then “welcome here without fear.”
The Poor Man’s Club hates the stuffed suit kind;
I opine it dislikes the “know
It all” sort, the artistically weird,
Still more it detests the blow.
It ignores the sycophant’s sly, smooth tricks
And the man who tries to droll.
It shunts a cold, climbing, cynical cad
As it would a plain damned fool.
In short it’s a sane sort of potpourri
Or a melting pot, you know,
For “high brow,” “low brow,” no brows at all,
Or flotsam who just come and go.
Yes, the Poor Man’s Club is a leveling place
For the man with mental bumps.
Its light and cheer are just the best boost
For the one who’s in the dumps.
Life’s edges rough with a deft, tactful touch,
It smooths for the man who’s down,
And the one who’s up never tries the snide trick
Of a patronizing frown.
So if some night you are all out of sorts
And don’t know what to do,
Why just drop in to the Poor Man’s Club,
And let me present to you
First “Jack” and “Mac,” then old “Skeff” and “Lope”
And “Jawn” and rare “Doc” and “Bill,”
Also “Mont” and “Cook,” or some “also ran brows,”
And then you can have your fill
Of talk that’s light and a good heartening up
And kindly repartee,
In the night you spend in parry and tierce
At the sign of the “Old P. M. C.”

(Philadelphia Press, July 16, 1911).
RETROSPECT
She’s sweet, I declare, and she’s real debonair,
And she just sort of has me “way up in the air!”
There’s a touch of the gyp in her arch little eye,
And the savor of health as she passes you by.
Her hair is jet black; her look rings real true,
And the tinge of her heart I am sure is true blue.
I shall ever recall, if I live to four score,
The impress she made on me, the old bore,
As she sat on the stairs one night long ago,
With a touch of the roguish, a wonderful glow
In her exquisite eyes never equaled as yet.
They’ve haunted me since and I’ll never forget
That touch of the roguish, that wonderful glow
In her exquisite eyes on that night long ago.
ON “GUNGHA DIN”
Have you ever heard Schaffer declaim of old “Din,”
“Din,” “Gungha Din,”
He gives all its savors,
Its turns and its quavers
And all the camp flavors
Of “Din,” “Gungha Din.”
I wish Rudyard Kipling could hear Schaffer chin
On “Din,” “Gungha Din,”
He catches its chiming,
Its scanning and rhyming,
And the depth of repining
In “Din,” “Gungha Din.”
With a mien that is grave, old Schaffer wades in
To “Din,” “Gungha Din!”
You hear bullets flying
And screeching, men sighing
When Schaffer is plying
His “Din,” “Gungha Din.”
If some night you hear a real terrible din
After “Din,” “Gungha Din!”
You’ll know they’re applauding
And cheering and lauding
Old Schaffer marauding
Through “Din,” “Gungha Din.”
WHY?
What a glance in your sweet, soulful eyes!
What a tilt to your nose, just above
The moue to your lips, that is charming.
Your delicate ears, sweet, I love!
I’ll love you, my wee girl, forever;
With the strength of my soul, I will do
The best I can plan for you, darling,
And why? Why because, dear, you’re you!
BARNEY
Have you ne’er heard of Barney?
Come, none of your blarney;
You’ve ne’er heard of Barney, the wight?
He’s a real Celt; he’s witty;
He lives in this city,
And waits at Meran’s every night.
There once ’rose the question
Midst mental congestion
Produced by ‘Vin Ordinaire;’
“What shape is this world here,
Round, ovoid, spheroidal,
Elliptical, nut-shaped or square?”
After hopeless arraignment,
With well-done containment,
One called on old Barney so that
He might judge the matter—
To ease up the clatter,
And put a quick end to the spat.
“I’ve thought and I’ve wondered,”
Said Barney, “I’ve pondered,
To see, sir, just where I was at.
The world is not round, sir,
For I’ve always found, sir,
Whenever I hit it, ’twas flat.”
COME, LITTLE GIRL
Oh, come, little girl, and play with me
For I would be your little boy.
We will never grow old, little girl, at all;
We’ll hop, skip and jump and play with a ball:
We’ll frolic, and laugh and climb the trees tall,
Just you, little girl, and I.
Oh, come, little girl and play with me,
For I would be your little boy.
We’ll make believe cats and doggies and things
Are elephants, lions and eagles with wings;
We’ll dream in the woods, where the waterfall sings,
Just you, little girl, and I.
Oh, come, little girl and play with me,
For I would be your little boy.
We’ll make believe you, little girl, and I
Are married some day, and then by and by,
We’ll buy paper kiddies, and croon “lullaby,”
Just you, little girl, and I.
Do come little girl, please play with me,
For I must be your little boy
We’ll build a sweet house, little girl, our own,
Of sassafras wood, and birch, and stone;
We’ll bake big mud pies, and cookies and pome,
You, sweet little girl, and I.
I’LL COME, LITTLE BOY
I’ll come and play with you, little boy,
For I would be your little girl.
We’ll laugh, we’ll love, we’ll play and we’ll sing;
We’ll just pretend lake down by the old spring,
And toss ourselves high in the old willow swing,
Just you, little boy, and I.
Yes, I’ll come and play with you, little boy,
For I would be your little girl.
I’ll bring my sweet kitties and doggies and “Ted”,
The little brown bear, with the cute little head,
And we’ll sing them to sleep in a wee trundle bed,
Just you, little boy, and I.
Oh! I’ll come and play with you, little boy,
For I would be your little girl.
We’ll sit by the brook where the cataract calls;
And make believe, down by the Silver Thread Falls,
That we’re on a honeymoon, like Grandma Mauls,
Just you, little boy, and I.
Yes, I’ll come and play with you, little boy,
For I must be your little girl.
I’ll cook in an oven of clay and of loam;
I’ll kiss you, dear boy, whene’er you come home,
And then you’ll kiss me, little boy, all my own,
Just you, little boy, and I.
CHENOWETH
I’ve followed athletes’ foibles since Walter Camp began
To pick foot-ball immortals for “The All-American,”
But close as I’ve observed them at home, abroad, afar,
I’m sure that “Texas” Chenoweth is easily the star
Of all elusive “quarters” who ever tried to squirm
On foot-ball field deceptive; on footing wet or firm.
He twists just like a serpent; he’s cunning as a fox;
He runs as from a creditor; he’s mighty hard to box.
He’s slippery as an oyster; he’s fleeter than a deer;
He dodges like a debtor; he jumps now there, now here.
I’ve seen DeSaulles cavorting from this goal unto that;
To “Phil” King I’ve paid homage; to Daly doffed my hat.
“Brown’s” Sprackling was a wonder; Carl Williams was a peach;
To Poe, finesse in foot-ball was very hard to teach.
Out West there was a wonder named Walter Eckersall;
Old Bray, the Easton wonder, was a terror with the ball.
And so, ad infinitum, I might enumerate
The gamut of the heroes who really scintillate
In firmament of foot-ball, the king of out-door sport,
When put to the defensive, to really show one’s forte,
But in quaffing to those heroes who’re destined e’er to shine,
Or in toasting to great “quarters” in retrospective wine,
I’ll just defer to Kipling and attempt to plagiarize
Those lines of his so potent, and not philosophize
Here’s to ’Weth, ’Weth, ’Weth, Chenoweth,
You doughty little “quarter,” get your breath,
Though they’ve tackled, mauled and flayed you,
And in Earth’s dank mud have laid you,
You’ve “got ’em shooting ducks,” “Tex” Chenoweth.

Philadelphia Lehigh Club “NEWS,”
January 1914.
YOU WONDER
You wonder, you surmise,
And with imploring eyes,
You ask me: “Will you always love me so?”
Your soul is searching mine,
While your trembling lips make sign
To ask me “Will you always love me so?”
Your soul is all afire,
With that questioning desire
To ask me: “Will you always love me so?”
But your pride bids you keep still,
And you force me by sheer will
To tell you: “I will always love you so.”
IN “DEL’S”
In the rich warm light,
We sat one night
At dear Delmonico’s.
The menu there,
With dishes rare,
Hints gastronomic throes.
She scanned it down,
’Twixt smile and frown,
And then expressed a wish
To try some quails
And Newburg snails—
The last a dainty dish.
New York her “town,”
On which we frown
In Philadelphia slow,
And not a word
I’ve ever heard
Of eating snails, you know.
I said as much
With just a touch
Of thin-veiled irony,
And then she said,
With turn of head,
While smiling quizzically:
“In Quaker town,
Of great renown,
They tell me they’re so slow,
They don’t eat snail
Because they fail
To catch them. Is it so?”
THE MOTHER
Ah! for one look at you,
Dear baby mine.
Ah! just to fondle you,
Croon you a rhyme.
Ah! for the eyes of you,
Dear little pearl.
Ah! just to love you,
My baby girl.
JUMBO’S DREAM
“Listen, my children, and you shall here,”
Not the “midnight ride of Paul Revere,”
But a dream of the elephant, Jumbo fine,
Who measured standing say nine feet nine,—
His dream of the animals at the Zoo.
Of course you know them just as I do;
The lion, the tiger, the grizzly bear,
Old Jumbo. Yes? Well then you’ll care
To hear of what the animals planned
In old Jumbo’s dream, a really grand
Scheme together down by the pond;
Caretakers asleep; their keepers fond—
A plan to learn the human way
Of learning and playing, et cetera.
A college they wanted with flags and cheers
Like Yale and Harvard—you know, my dears.
First, old Jumbo called for order there
By the old swan pond; he held the chair.
He looked them over with kindly eye
Then waved his trunk and with lordly cry
Proposed that they have a college grand—
Professors and such, and a college band,
With college colors; but first a yell
Like the college boys; for he knew full well
That a college cheer by the animals there
Would wonderful be beyond compare.
He straightway appointed of parrots five
To choose a cheer real loud and live
To start off their college so grand and fine
In eighteen hundred and ninety-nine.
The parrot committee composed a cheer;
It went exactly like this, my dear:
“Hiss, squeal, roar,
Roar, roar, more,
Grunt, yell, chatter;
Hurrah for college and Alma Mater.”
They practiced this cheer, oh! time on time;
The parrots leading the cheering line;
A terrible, fearfully mixed-up noise,
Fifty times worse than the college boys,
For the snake would hiss and the monkeys squeal;
The lion would roar till one could feel
The ground all tremble from noise he made
Like soldiers marching on dress parade;
The hyena let out such a mighty yell
That the leaves most off the branches fell;
The geese would cackle, the baboons chatter,
And all for college and alma mater.
“’Twill never do,” said the elephant sad—,
For the cheer was really “righty” bad.
He looked discouraged, with face awry,
While a tear appeared in each small eye;
He heaved a big sigh, then looking around—
Awakened all trembling upon the ground.
So ended his dream of a college fine,
With parrots leading the cheering line.
He looked at his keeper as if to say:
“I’ll never again eat a bale of hay;
For such overeating most always means
The most impossible kind of dreams.
Come take we a walk, good old Keeper Jack,
With the kiddies a-hanging on my back;
With the kiddies, dear old Keeper, I say,
On my big broad back the livelong day.”
THE BLUES
If you’ve ever a “grouch,” little girl,
And your brain is all twisted and torn;
If your nerves are all racked, little girl,
And the world looks all blue and forlorn;
Don’t commune with yourself, little girl,
But just let me share it, please do,
For I’m part of you, my little girl,
And I love you, dear heart, yes, I do.
THE “I TOLD YOU SO CLUB”
Old Winchester borough, in thriftiness thorough,
Sits ninety miles back from the sea;
’Tis famed for its learning and all things concerning
Its people of high pedigree.
Now some are quite clever, some brainy, scarce ever
Are any thick-witted and “fat”;
None over-contented, yet mighty well vented;
Real satisfied, passe and pat.
The world all around may astound, not confound them;
“They’re there” in their insular way;
You may laughingly drool them; but trip them or fool them;
If you do they’ll admit it? Not they!
Its dames real exclusive, though slightly abusive,
Just deft subterranean digs.
You can’t analyze them (noblesse), nor despise them,
These quaint and bizarre periwigs.
Now once I remember, ’twas late in November,
A handsome young blade struck the town;
Distingué he was this bold rusher, this crusher;
He did up us rural swains brown;
His hair was so curly, complexion so pearly;
His eyes flashed a real soulful glow;
He’d ancestors famous and average and heinous,
Of the last though he spoke “sotto vo.”
By profession a drummer, this hummer, this stunner;
The mesdames and misses cast looks
Of wild admiration and praise, adulation,
As he glibly and smoothly talked books.
When he’d quote a good rhyme or distich, they opine;
Their souls all mesmerized, torn,
“That say what you will, he cast doubts willy-nilly,
Is sure to the real manner born.”
They smiled on and wined him and frequently dined him,
Which quite put a crimp in us beaux;
Who all became hectic, enraged, apoplectic,
As we found ourselves not comme il faut.
We planned and we wondered and craftily pondered
A plan of reprisal for quits,
Then we thought if we waited real patient, more sated,
We’d be than to throw fifty fits.
No haste and bad temper, not even a whimper;
We’d watch and we’d wait and we’d hope;
We’d give him good tether, the stuffer, the bluffer,
He’d hang himself high with the rope.
Now slow was the turning, and with envy burning,
We waited long weeks for his crown,
When early one morning we heard, without warning
He’d quickly and darkly left town.
A check ’twas that threw him, became his undoing
With Winchester’s creme de la creme.
There was weeping and wailing and very much railing;
“His likes just had never been seen.”
Now when tea-pots were boiling; the mesdames were spoiling
To square themselves—and not to squirm;
With demoiselles mustered round tea cups they blustered:
“I told you so,” each one in turn.
“I sensed he was nothin’,” said portly Miss Tuffin;
“I mistrusted,” said thin Aunty Gray.
“I somehow got thinkin’,” said Grandma a-blinkin’;
“He warn’t all he should be, that jay.”
“I had intuitions, like needles in cushions,”
Observed Ann, the good parson’s wife;
“Same as me,” yapped sour Fanny; “I knowed ye did, Annie;”
“Me too,” offered Miss Tilly Clife.
“I told you so,” each one to this one, to that one;
“I told you so,” chimed one and all.
They’d never admit he’d deceived them nor peeved them.
Nor out of them taken a fall.
We snubbed swains laughed loudly, yet held ourselves proudly;
We stood real aloof for a while.
Things must have an ending; so slowly unbending
We’d spar with a frown or a smile.
The entente came duly, if slowly, but truly,
And at last all were quite en rapport.
We dined well and wined well, and then all opined: “Well,
We’d forgive and forget the old score.”
*  *  *
Not Eve’s daughters only, but Adam’s sons lonely
Are hipped on their judgment of men;
They think they have got them, can size them or spot them,
But mostly they don’t. Dinna ken?
E PLURIBUS
Some have sung of the days in Vienna,
And others the strains “Wacht am Rhein;”
Men have mellowed to old Finnish folk tunes,
Kept step to Bavarian rhyme.
Old Madrid set our Spanish friends boasting:
Hungarian songs we’ve heard, too,
Yet, spite of the singing and toasting,
They live under Red, White and Blue.
They never go back to Vienna
Nor foregather again on the Rhine;
Have ne’er seen their kin in bleak Finland
Nor been o’er Bavarian line.
They’re not in Madrid when they’re boasting;
In Hungary things might not ring true.
All fine are the singing and toasting,
But they live under Red, White and Blue.
The Old World says we are commercial,
Yet “a dollar’s a dollar,” they say.
Have done with your “green eyes,” my brothers,
For world o’er achievement holds sway.
Come, cease your irrational boasting,
And stand by the land sought by you;
Then when you are singing and toasting,
Sing, sing for the Red, White and Blue,
From the Somme comes democracy’s pleading;
The Thames takes up the refrain.
The Scotch and the Irish are struggling;
Brave Canada’s not called in vain.
The Flemish not yielding or boasting;
Proud Portugal fights her way through.
And Italy’s brave sons we’re toasting,
We’re coming, the Red, White and Blue.
We’ll ne’er crook to yoke of a master;
To superman never pay toll;
We’ll never bow down like a vassal;
No, better the hemlock, the bowl!
The cause of humanity’s calling.
Take heart, we have heard it; we’re true;
For that cause brave men are now falling,
The men of the Red, White, and Blue.
THE MAN ABOUT TOWN
Oh, the “Man About Town;” the “Man About Town;”
He sometimes is “up,” and he’s usually “down.”
He’s always well-dressed, and he’s real debonair
And lives by his wits with a true savoir faire.
He quotes from R. Kipling, R. Service and “sich;”
Looks down on the poor, “plays up” to the rich.
The wise cannot answer his fool questionings;
His mental suggestions are terrible things.
He “blows hot and cold” with his two-edged breath,
And plays for your confidence “even till death.”
He looks in your eyes in a terrible way,
To find what you’ve “doped,” not because he’s O. K.
He’s glib on eugenics, and smattered in all
The games of cheap “con” on this old earthly ball.
Some day you may meet him, a real mental clown.
That cosmic creation, “The Man About Town.”
ELK CREEK
Purling and winding midst balsam and pine;
Hiding ’neath willow and spruce.
Sinuous, singing a sweet crooning rhyme;
Pleading to malcontents “truce.”
Lilting the line of a sad roundelay,
Presaging optimist’s prayer.
Sun-lit, twisting its silvery way,
Moon-kissed, ethereal, rare.
HOW THE VILLAGE CANARD STARTED
Tom walked into a bar-room to have a quiet beer,
Odds Bodkins! Jerry saw him, white-necktied Jerry Lear.
Now Jerry was an elder, a presbyter, you see,
Who prated loud ’gainst drinking, but “sneaked one” frequently.
Tom Benton was no tippler, but took one when he would,
No sweeter, kinder fellow e’er lived, nor half so good.
His quiet deeds of kindness, a help now here, now there,
A “candle under bushel” who always seemed to care
To help the weak and erring in unobtrusive way;
To make the lowly happy, and aching hearts make gay
By quip or jest or story, by his own soulful smile,
By merry rippling laughter, which heartened them awhile—
A law unto himself, then, this lovable old soul,
Who treated men as humans, but couldn’t “Jordan Roll,”
A bent and crooked body, but straight and pure at heart,
Who loved the young and aged, whom tears could rend apart.
Now this is how it happened that poor old Tom was damned
By Puritanic gossips through length and breath of land.
“Drab” Jerry told the parson, who told his wife, you see;
His wife informed Ned Nosy of Tom’s catastrophe,
Ned was a devout deacon, a long, thin-visaged wight,
Who’d sneak away sub rosa to train around at night,
But Sunday sat in church pew and bawled a mighty chant,
Or railed against men’s vices with Puritanic rant.
Ned buttonholed old Bowser, a wily, canny runt,
Who’d beat deserving clients by doing bankrupt’s stunt.
Old Bowser told his sister, the village gossip kind
Quite “confidential-like” spake to her “who speak my mind.”
Miss Bowser told the Hearts’ Club of wondrous pedigree,
Who all exclaimed “how dreadful,” at poor Tom’s plight you see.
The Club then told their “hubbies,” all men of great renown,
Of more or less veracity, who quickly told the “town.”
And so these old bucolics ripped poor Tom fore and aft;
They sneered and jeered and pitied, and chaffed and leered and laughed.
His quiet little “night-caps” grew to a mighty stream,
A riotous, raw revel, a Bacchanalian scream,
Now to the mighty truth, then, of all that canard crew,
There wouldn’t be a feather left if each one had his due.
THE SPRING VIOLET
Nestling in sun-lit valley;
Dew-kissed and petaled so rare;
Dainty as Daphne’s divinest;
Color cerulean, fair.
Graceful, petite and suggestive;
Urging the wooer’s behest,
Tenderly, lovingly covering
The heart in dear Mother Earth’s breast.
SANDY FLASH
A robber, in legend, S. Flash,
Was chock full of pep, fire, dash,
For he bluffed Chester County,
Bamboozled big bounty.
Some legend. Some brigand, one Flash.
Now this bold buccaneer, Sandy Flash,
When chock full of pep, fire, dash,
Made Abe Buzzard a piker,
Also Jess James, “Red Mike” or
The others a la Sandy Flash.

(After reading Bayard Taylor’s “Story of Kennett.”)
THE NEW SUIT
Willie Fiddle D. D. boasted twenty-five years;
He’d frittered his life quite away.
He lisped in a manner which moved one to tears,
And answered to all things, “I say!”
He sported a monocle really de trop,
And dined at Martin’s every night;
He talked of the gossip about “so-and-so”,
But “nevvah, ah nevvah,” talked “fight”.
Now grandfather D. had a plethoric purse
Which grandson would “touch” now and then;
For Willie since leaving his fond, doting nurse
Had not had real work in his ken.
Now once on a time, after dinner, at nine,
Which is really the time for a “touch,”
Old granddad sat reading of terrible war,
Whose horrors had troubled him much,
When Willie broke in, twixt a lisp and a squirm,
And plead for the price of a suit.
The old man turned red, white and blue, each in turn,
And out shot his big heavy boot
“You want a new suit,” roared the old man, aflame,
“You want a new suit, you young fright;
Your country is calling for men; it’s a shame.
Get out in the trenches and fight!
Get out in the trenches and fight like a man
Don’t stand there, you simp, like a mute.
Take a fall to yourself, and fight if you can;
Uncle Samuel will furnish a suit!”
THE LIBERTINE
He boasted a chivalrous birthright;
“The ladies” he toasted in wine;
He fumed at an off-color story,
And spoke of “those sisters of mine.”
Protected them all from designing
Intrigue, conniving and pelf,
Yet we all agreed in opining
He’d protect no girl from himself.
THE LIBERTY CORNET BAND
I’s hyeahd ol’ Massa Sousa
A playin’ wif his band;
Seen Massa Herbert wavin’
An’ beatin’ wif his hand.
De Jazz Band of de Navy—
Say, chile, dat bunch kin play.
But has you hyeahd ouah Lib’ty
Cawnet Band blaze away?
Jess Williams de drum majah,
Bom, bom, de ol’ bass drum,
A struttin’ lak some rajah,
Toot, toot, chile, hyeah dey come.
Ol’ Goose Greek bridge a crossin’
Zim, zam, de cymbals land.
Keep step, coon, follow long now
Ouah Lib’ty Cawnet Band.
Today’s ouah day o’ days, chile;
Heads up now, march away!
De sidewalk we’s obstructin’?
Go, long, boss; hyeah dem play.
We’s just a clean fu’gotten
We’s livin! Aint it grand?
Chest out, eyes front, keep step to
De Lib’ty Cawnet Band.
I knows I’s retrospectin’,
But den I’s growin’ old.
I sawt o’ luv dem deah days
When I was pea’t and bold.
Jess Williams de drum majah,
De fines’ in de land.
A struttin’ an’ a leadin’
Dat Lib’ty Cawnet Band.
Jess Williams de drum majah,
Bom, bom, de ol’ bass drum,
A struttin’ lak some rajah,
Toot, toot, hark! hyeah dey come.
Ol’ Goose Creek bridge a crossin’,
Zim, zam, de cymbals land.
Hats off, chile, Lawd bless evah
Ouah Lib’ty Cawnet Band!
THE PERIODIC
A poor periodic,
In mood episodic,
Sat shaking with “nerves” one day,
When a “pony” beside him
Ran way down inside him,
And chased old Neuritis away.
MRS. MURPHY’S PURCHASE
Mrs. Murphy was on purchasing bent,
So she hied to “The Great Big Store.”
She gazed around, then finally went
Towards a fellow just six-feet-four,
A floor-walk man with legs that curved
Till they looked like a mystic O.
“He’d never be catching a hog,” she averred,
“Nor shine at a greased pig show!”
This much to herself—then she said to “that gint”
In a raucous voice of command:
“I want some gloves, of a pearl-gray tint,
To be wearin’ upon me hand.”
The man bowed low and had turned to go
Towards the place where the gloves were sold,
With “walk this way”—when Mrs. M. lo!
Stopped and looked at that figure bold.
She gazed at his legs, then fairly yelled,
As she looked him o’er and o’er,
“Me walk that way, no, not if I’m held;
No! not fer yer whole blamed store!”
THE LEGEND OF
DEBORAH’S ROCK
A rock sits by
A stream.
I don’t know why
They call
It Deborah’s Rock.
I guess
It’s not a “knock”
At her.
It’s hard and rough.
’Twas once
Of prehistoric stuff
And then
’Twas soft, on dit.
For me
I don’t know, see!
They say
An Indian red
Once fell
In love with Deb-
O Rah,
Then out, and why?
Just guess!
(Here you must cry)
She jumped
Right off that rock,
Kersplash!
My what a knock
She had.
She died (Here blink)
And left
Deep print, they think,
On top
The rock, from place
She jumped,
Of foot. Now space
Forbids
I dare deny
She did,
But this I try
To see
In vain, how she
Could sink
Her foot, you see,
Into
That rock so rough.
Now this
Is quite enough
To give
The lie to tale.
But here,
Lest this grow stale,
I say
I just believe
The maid
Weighed tons! Perceive?
Or else
Was built dame, bold,
In pre-
Historic mould
When rock
Was soft and then—
But there,
“I dinna ken!”
THE ACTOR-MAN
A fun-making, pun-making actor,
Came out on the stage one night.
In real histrionics, a factor,
He came down the boards to the light.
“I’m starving,” he cried; “I am needing
Food for my body and soul.”
He looked towards the ceiling in pleading,
Then the curtain came down with a “roll.”
THE GANGSTER
“Hand me the dream book,” the gangster winked;
“Bring out the old harpoon—
I mean the dead list, the men I’ve pinked;
Bilged to the old time tune.
Listen, I’ll tell you the system’s sin;
Show you the way we do—
God, how that cough hurts, I’m most all in—
Guess I’ll confess, I’m through.
Open the dead list, begin with ‘A,’
Andrews, the first one there;
Beat me. I got him; crossed him, say,
Tell me you’ll keep it, swear!
No? Well, to Hell then! I just plain lied;
Framed it his wife wasn’t true.
Killed him? I know it; he up and died;
Took a lead pill or two.
Turn to the ‘B’s’ now, old Doctor Blight,
Lord, how he caught us red,
Square as ye make ’em, but ‘black is white’
Or ‘white is black’ ’tis said;
Least that’s our creed; we painted up
Slip of his boyhood days;
Sensitive man, Blight, he hit the cup,
Took to the rum-dum’s ways.
Look at the ‘C’s’ next, Judge William Clate,
Straight as a ramrod, ‘Will;’
Gave us ‘the double.’ Decision straight?
Sure Mike. He paid the bill.
We stuffed the ballot late in the fall,
Presto! out went the Judge!
Most broke his heart, his friends and all.
Coolly we fed our grudge.
You say it’s rotten? Sure, lad, I know,
Yes, to the very core.
Built on the weakness of ‘So and So.’
‘Framing,’ ‘getting’ and more
Words that a man hates dyed in sin,
Lying as I do here;
‘Dictographs,’ ‘trumping’ and ‘listening in,’
‘Crafty,’ ‘foxy,’ ‘the queer,’
‘Blackmailing,’ ‘crossing,’ ’tis only such,
No other words I’ve known.
Good things in life I ain’t seen much;
What I have reaped I’ve sown.
Laughed at the dreamers, the fighters clean,
Men with no axe to grind;
Scoffed at the white ones and have seen
Others who’ve lost their mind.
Snuffed out the gentle; smeared with mud
Men with escutcheons fair;
Joshed at the learned and cursed blue-blood,
Sneered at their manners rare;
Called them the ‘stuffed suits,’ laid my plot
To safe and sure get mine.
Men call me ‘self-made.’ A self-made what?
Dough I’ve got and some fine
Diamonds a sparklin’, but just know
I ain’t so great; I’m small.
Money does talkin,’ they say, but Joe,
Money won’t do it all.
Boot-licked the Trust, then twisted, swirled
Up on the ‘reps’ I’d killed;
Slimed along playing the underworld;
Think of the blood I’ve spilled!
God bless the self mades, who’re manly ones,
Modest and generous, kind!
Damn such as me, a self-made bum,
Crafty, crooked and blind!
Money’s all right if you’re right, see?
Bad if you’re bad at heart.
Right with yourself is the way to be;
Don’t try to play too smart!
Here’s where you need help, when you’re all in,
Beaten down to a clod;
Showing your hand and squaring up
Yourself when you’re facing God.”
TOM
(With apologies to Thomas and Quintus.)
Oh, T. W. Pierce, scanner of Q. H. Flaccus,
Delver in Socrates’ ways, greetings, best wishes from us.
Juggler in dactyls and such; beating iambic tattoo;
Aristotelian in thought; epic in quality too.
Twin, in love for the old, with one “Scotty” Waddell,
Give us the “once over,” friend. Think that you can’t? What the hell!
Spellbinding classical clubs, Phi Beta Kappa’s delight,
Give us a touch of your art while you are with us to-night,
Better a touch of yourself, you who are true to Yale Blue.
Health and a long life, old friend; all that is fine, Tom, for you!
LA LANGUE ANGLAISE
In French, she tattled like fury;
Her Spanish was quite comme il faut.
Italian she rattled like monkey;
In German, she spoke “high” and “low.”
Though born in Chicago, the windy,
And trussed up in finishing school,
Her English was really a shindy,
And smashed each grammatical rule.
NE’ER MORE
A reader of Poe yclept Lake,
Quite often of ales did partake.
Once he took most a score,
Quoth he ravin’; “Ne’er more,”
So they soon held a wake for one, Lake.
WHEN “TY” COBB COMES TO TOWN
Bill Brown, the undertaker, sat
With a droop in his big blue eye,
His collar wilted, tie askew,
And his red face all awry.
The beads of perspiration rolled
And bathed him cheek and jowl;
He fanned himself with palm leaf fan
And mopped his face with a towel.
Bill Brown, the undertaker, sat,
And into a smile broke he.
He’d been some working “mon” that day;
He’d had funerals twelve, you see.
“Not common-like of common folks,”
He said, and his laugh beguiled,
“But Grandmas twelve of office boys.”
Bill stopped, then broadly smiled.

Transcriber’s Note

Dialect, obsolete and misspelled words were not changed. Added an unprinted hyphen to “so-and-so.”